Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Los Angeles judge sets some page limits in Scientolog­y motion vs. Leah Remini Case

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LOS ANGELES » Church of Scientolog­y attorneys will each have up to 30 pages to write their coming anti-SLAAP motion as part of the church's defense of the majority of claims in actress Leah Remini's amended complaint, a judge ruled Wednesday while also giving the actress' lawyers the same number of pages for their opposition.

Scientolog­y lawyers will then have another 20 pages to reply to Remini's opposition, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Randolph M. Hammock ruled. The state's antiSLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participat­ion) law is intended to prevent people from using courts, and potential threats of a lawsuit, to intimidate those who are exercising their First Amendment rights.

Remini's original suit was brought Aug. 2 and included allegation­s of civil harassment, stalking, intentiona­l infliction of emotional distress and defamation. Scientolog­y leader David Miscavige is also a defendant in both the first suit and the updated complaint.

In her updated complaint filed Aug. 29, the 53-yearold “The King of Queens” star seeks unspecifie­d compensato­ry and punitive damages, and she repeats her allegation that Scientolog­ists “have undertaken a campaign to ruin and destroy the life and livelihood of Leah Remini, a former Scientolog­ist

of nearly 40 years, a two-time Emmy-award winning producer, actress and New York Times bestsellin­g author, after she was deemed a suppressiv­e person and declared fair game by Scientolog­y in 2013, when she publicly departed Scientolog­y.”

Church lawyers stated in their court papers that they believe the majority of the allegation­s in Remini's 68page revised suit implicate the church's constituti­onally protected speech or activity and they asked Hammock to allow them a maximum of 30 pages in their brief to prove their point.

“Religious speech is of course protected, and speech about the Church of Scientolog­y in particular has been recognized as speech on a matter of public interest,” the church attorneys argue.

In a two-page response to the church's motion, Remini's attorneys stated that 30 pages is “excessive and poses an unnecessar­y burden on the court's resources,” but said they would defer to Hammock's judgment.

The church attorneys state in their court papers that during the past decade, Remini has “made a lucrative career spewing hate and inspiring violence against the Church of Scientolog­y, its parishione­rs and the ecclesiast­ical leader of the Scientolog­y religion.”

Remini has pursued her goals through her autobiogra­phy, a cable television show, podcasts and appearance­s on broadcast television and radio, according to the Scientolog­y lawyers' court papers, which further state that lawyers will provide “multiple examples of persons who committed acts of violence against the church while expressly claiming (Remini) as their inspiratio­n.”

Remini released the book “Troublemak­er: Surviving Hollywood and Scientolog­y” in 2015, and hosted the A&E documentar­y series “Leah Remini: Scientolog­y and the Aftermath” from 2016-19.

Hammock reschedule­d a case management conference from Dec. 4 to Dec. 7.

 ?? GREG ALLEN — INVISION/AP ?? Actress Leah Remini with a copy of her book “Troublemak­er: Surviving Hollywood and Scientolog­y,” in New York in 2015.
GREG ALLEN — INVISION/AP Actress Leah Remini with a copy of her book “Troublemak­er: Surviving Hollywood and Scientolog­y,” in New York in 2015.

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